In a statement to the BBC, Fletcher also said the BMA resident doctors’ committee remained “open and willing to meet with the health secretary”.

He added that throughout this dispute, the BMA has “negotiated in good faith with a genuine desire to reach a resolution”.

Streeting told the BBC’s Sunday with Laura Kuenssberg programme that resident doctors “had a 28.9% pay rise within the first weeks of this Labour government”.

“There’s a deal on the table that would have given them an average 4.9% more for this year, 7.1% for some of the lowest-paid doctors.”

Despite receiving pay rises worth 33% over the past four years, the BMA argues that doctors are still being paid a fifth less than they were in 2008 once inflation is taken into account.

Further addressing the union’s accusation that the deal had been changed at the last minute, Streeting told Victoria Derbyshire, standing in for Kuenssberg, this would not be in his “interest or the government’s”.